ANALYTICAL INDEX 



461 



PUPAL GROOVE, ORIGIN OF, IN 

 PIER IN AE, V. 147-50. 



Pupation, method of, in Vanessidae, 

 151. 



Puritan movement opposed to 

 evolution, 56. 



Puss moth, 159. 



Puttalam, Ceylon, dorippus f. of L. 

 chrysippus at, 70 n. 2. 



Pymma tree, nest of Microhierax 

 in, 290. 



Pyrameis cardui, 85. 



Q 



Quagga and mare, supposed endur- 

 ing effects of cross (telegony), 185. 



Quarterly Journal of Micro- 

 scopical Science, 60 n. 3. 



Quarterly Keview, 49, 82. 



among dead leaves, 299 ; colour ad- 

 justment to lichen, &c., by larva of, 



307. 



quercinaria,Ettgonia, slight cocoon 

 of, 149, 150; cryptic colouring of 

 larva and pupa of, 149, 150. 



R 



Rabbits, differences in skeletons of 

 domestic, 76 ; in-and-in breeding and, 

 93 ; J. C. Prichard on Angora, 187 ; 

 value of recognition marking of, 357; 

 episematic characters of, compared 

 with aposematic of skunk, 358. 



RACES, DIAGNOSIS TRAVERSED 

 BY SUB-SPECIES OR GEOGRAPHICAL, 

 II. 75, 76. 



Races, importance in the origin of 

 species, of sub-species or geogra- 

 phical, xvi, 75, 76. 



Radiolaria in classification, 25 ; 

 consideration of, omitted, 28. 



Radium, life of the sun and, 15 

 n. 2 ; heat conductivity argument 

 and, 15 n, 2. 



Raindrops, prints of, as evidence of 

 uniformity, 19. 



rapae y Pterz's, in-and-in breeding 

 and, 93 ; pupal groove of, 147 ; choice 

 ofresting-site by, 301. 



RAPID ADJUSTABLE PROTECTIVE 

 RESEMBLANCE, X. 304, 305. 



Rattle of CroialuSy meaning and 

 origin of, 324. 



Rattlesnake (Crotalus), warning 

 sound of, 324. 



' Rattlesnake ', Huxley's voyage 

 in the, 199. 



Ray, John, fixity of species and, 56. 



RECENT DARKENING OF N. ENG- 

 LISH MOTHS, X. 308-10. 



RECENT EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT 

 OF BATESIAN MIMICRY, X. 350-6. 



Receptaculites in early Palaeozoic, 

 27. 



' Recession towards mediocrity,' 

 no. 



Recessive and dominant characters, 

 xxx-xxxiii. 



Recherch.es pour servir & 

 1'histoire des insectes fossiles des 

 temps primaires, &c., Charles 

 Brongniart, 35. 



Reciprocal mimicry, see RECIPRO- 

 CAL WARNING COLOURS, &c. 



RECIPROCAL WARNING COLOURS; 

 DIAPOSEMATIC RESEMBLANCE, X. 

 344, 345 : see also 213-15, 330, 331. 



RECOGNITION AND WARNING 

 CHARACTERS, X. 315-58: see 

 Warning Colours and Signalling 

 Colours. For divisions, sections, sub- 

 sections, &c., see pp. 294-6. 



RECOGNITION OR EPISEMATIC 

 CHARACTERS, X. 357, 358. 



Recognition characters, place in a 

 scheme of the bionomic uses of colour, 

 226; defined, 315, 357; warning 

 (aposematic) characters compared 

 with, 357, 358 ; sounds and move- 

 ments as, 357, 358; scents as, 350, 

 358, 358 n. I ; of Ungulates, e.g. of red 

 deer, 357, of rabbit, 357-8 ; Wallace's 

 interpretation of epigamic characters 

 as, 380. 



Recognition of sexes perhaps aided 

 by discriminating features persisting 

 in closest mimicry, 350; probably 

 aided by special scent-brands of 

 males, 358, 358 n. i. 



Red deer, recognition marking 



of, 357- 



REDUCTION OF SHADOW BY 

 ATTITUDE, X. 300, 301. 



Reduviidae, ant-like larva of 

 species of, 257 n. I ; mimicked by 

 larva of Hymenopus bicornis, 378 n. 3. 



Regeneration, Professor T. H. 

 Morgan, 128. 



regina, Teracolus, mimetic of 

 Belenois in wet season, procryptic in 

 dry, 341. 



Reid, Archdall, on the different 



